Center for Biological Diversity v. United States Environmental Protection Agency

CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedFebruary 6, 2024
Docket4:20-cv-00555
StatusUnknown

This text of Center for Biological Diversity v. United States Environmental Protection Agency (Center for Biological Diversity v. United States Environmental Protection Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Center for Biological Diversity v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, (D. Ariz. 2024).

Opinion

Case 4:20-cv-00555-DCB Document 256 Filed 02/06/24 Page 1 of 47

1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA 8 9 Center for Biological Diversity, et al., No. CV-20-00555-TUC-DCB 10 Plaintiffs, ORDER 11 v. 12 United States Environmental Protection Agency, et al., 13 Defendants, 14 and 15 16 Bayer Cropscience LP, et al.,

17 Intervenor-Defendants.

18 The Court finds the EPA violated FIFRA notice and comment mandates for issuing 19 “new use” pesticide registrations for OTT dicamba for DT crops (cotton and soybean). For 20 the reasons explained below, the Court vacates the 2020 registrations for XtendiMax, 21 Enginia, and Tavium. 22 A. HISTORIC AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 23 Plaintiffs challenge the registrations issued in 2020 and amendments made in 2022 24 and 2023 by the Defendant, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for 25 over-the-top (OTT) use of dicamba products manufactured by the Intervenor Defendants, 26 agrochemical companies. Plaintiffs allege violations of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, 27 Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), the Endangered Species Act (ESA), and the Administrative 28 Procedures Act (APA). Case 4:20-cv-00555-DCB Document 256 Filed 02/06/24 Page 2 of 47

1 Dicamba, a chemical herbicide, combats weeds and has been used for more than 2 fifty years. Dicamba is an effective weed killer, but its toxicity is not limited to weeds; it 3 kills broadleaf plants, generally, including desirable plants, bushes, and trees. Dicamba 4 easily moves off-field due to wind drift during spraying and is volatile, meaning it 5 evaporates into a gas during spraying if there is a temperature inversion1 or even hot 6 weather can cause it to vaporize after spraying. Either way, its volatility causes it to reach 7 nontarget plants offsite, i.e., off-field, due to wind drift. Originally, dicamba was registered 8 for limited use, largely, in late winter or early spring before crops were planted or in the 9 early growing season for post-emergent use on crops, like wheat and corn, that are naturally 10 tolerant to dicamba. Nat'l Fam. Farm Coal. v. U.S. Env't Prot. Agency (NFFC) 11 (Monsanto)2, 960 F.3d 1120, 1125 (9th Cir. 2020). 12 After many years, many weeds developed a resistance to glyphosate, the main 13 ingredient in the original dicamba, “Round-up,” products. Monsanto and other 14 agrochemical companies developed “low-volatility” dicamba products, which in 15 combination with deregulation in 2015 of genetically engineered dicamba-tolerant (DT) 16 crops (cotton and soybean), opened the door for post-emergent OTT spaying during the 17 growing season of dicamba products on DT crops (cotton and soybean). Id. at 1125-26. 18 In 2016, EPA granted three low-volatility OTT dicamba products two-year 19 conditional registrations, as follows: Monsanto Company (now Bayer) for XtendiMax; 20 Corteva (formerly DuPont) for FeXapan, and BASF for Enginia. In response to soring 21 numbers of complaints about offsite damage due to dicamba drift during the 2017 growing 22 season, Monsanto proposed, and EPA adopted by amendment a more restrictive use and 23 corresponding label restrictions for the OTT dicamba products. The 2018 growing season 24 saw similar complaints. Id. at 1126-1128. 25 The conditional registrations for all three OTT dicamba products were set to expire 26 in 2018, but on October 31, 2018, the EPA approved and granted requests for extensions 27 1 The earth’s cooling at night cools the air near the surface, which becomes trapped there by warmer air above it. The pesticide, like any other pollutant, is trapped in the cooler air 28 near the earth and subject to moving offsite. 2 The Court distinguishes between cases based on Defendant Intervenors.

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1 and issued “conditional two-year amended registrations.” Id. at 1124. EPA imposed further 2 use restrictions for OTT application of dicamba herbicides to DT soybeans and cotton, 3 most importantly as follows: “(1) application was permitted only between one hour after 4 sunrise and two hours before sunset (rather than any time between sunrise and sunset); (2) 5 only two OTT applications were permitted per crop for soybeans, with the last application 6 made no later than forty-five days after planting; (3) only two OTT applications were 7 permitted per crop for cotton, with the last application made no later than sixty days after 8 planting; (4) an omnidirectional, in-field fifty-seven-foot buffer was required in certain 9 counties to protect listed plant species; and (5) applications could be made only by certified 10 applicators.” Id. at 1130. 11 A lawsuit followed, with Plaintiffs prevailing. The court revoked the EPA’s 12 conditional “new use” registrations for dicamba-based herbicides for post-emergent, OTT 13 spraying of genetically modified DT soybeans and cotton. Id. at 1144–45. In NFFC 14 (Monsanto), the court held EPA violated FIFRA six ways, id. at 1124, 1144 (summarizing 15 holdings), separated into two parts: 1) EPA “substantially understated three risks it 16 acknowledged” and 2) “also entirely failed to acknowledge three other risks.” Id. at 1124. 17 The court’s detailed decision was also filled with factual record findings recounting 18 catastrophic results for farmers and the environment, such as millions of acres of off-field 19 dicamba drift, as well as damage to crops, wild plants, and native ecosystems each growing 20 season since EPA approved OTT spraying in 2016. Id. 21 The first group of holdings in NFFC (Monsanto) related to costs to farmers from 22 dicamba drift, including that the EPA understated the dicamba amount sprayed (and thus 23 the drift harm from it), id. at 1124, 1136, improperly minimized the amount of under- 24 reporting of drift damage, id. at 1137–38, and, despite the record evidence the registration 25 decision “refused to quantify or estimate the amount of damage caused” by drift as an 26 economic cost, id. at 1138. 27 The second group of violations noted in NFFC (Monsanto) were predicated on the 28 court’s finding that the EPA based registration on unrealistic and unanalyzed mitigation,

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1 failed to account for the substantial non-compliance with the dicamba use instructions or 2 grapple with the near impossibility of following the label in real-world farming conditions, 3 and what that would mean for increased drift damage. Id. at 1144. In other words, the EPA 4 improperly based its approval on the premise that the label’s mitigation would be followed 5 and, accordingly, limit off-field drift, while the record evidence showed that label 6 instructions were “difficult if not impossible” to follow. Id. at 1124. The court held the 7 EPA failed to recognize and factor in the “clear” economic cost from drift damage coercing 8 farmers to defensively adopt dicamba-tolerant crops, and those anti-competitive, 9 monopolistic ramifications. Id. EPA entirely failed to consider the social costs to farming 10 communities from pitting neighbor against neighbor related to drift damage to crops, and 11 trees and gardens. Id. at 1143. 12 On June 3, 2020, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit decided 13 NFFC (Monsanto) finding that substantial evidence did not support the EPA’s registration 14 decisions because it was contrary to the record and the agency had “failed to perform a 15 proper analysis of the risks and the resulting costs of the uses.” Id. at 1144. Relevant here, 16 the appellate court’s jurisdiction in NFFC (Monsanto) hinged on its conclusion that the 17 October 31, 2018, decision to register the three dicamba herbicides for OTT application 18 qualified as an “order” issued by the EPA. Id. at 1132.

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Bluebook (online)
Center for Biological Diversity v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/center-for-biological-diversity-v-united-states-environmental-protection-azd-2024.